Chemical Technology September 2016

INNOVATION

Using natural gas as raw material for aromatic chemicals

“By using a ce- ramic membrane that simultaneously removes hydrogen and injects oxygen, we have been able to make liquid hy- drocarbons directly from methane in a one-step process. As a bonus, the process also generates a high-purity hydrogen stream as a byprod- uct,” he explained. “At a macro level

CoorsTek Membrane Sciences, in Colora- do, USA, recently announced that a team made up of some of its scientists, others from the University of Oslo (Norway), and also from the Instituto de Tecnología Química (Spain), has developed a new process to use natural gas as rawmaterial for aromatic chemicals. The process uses a novel ceramic membrane to make the direct, non-oxidative conversion of gas to liquids possible for the first time, reducing cost, eliminating multiple process steps, and avoiding any carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions. The resulting aromatic precur- sors are source chemicals for insulation materials, plastics, textiles, and jet fuel, among other valuable products. “Consider the scale of the oil, gas, and petrochemicals industry today,” said Dr Jose Serra, Professor with the Instituto de Tecnología Química. “With new ceramic membrane reactors to make fuels and chemicals from natural gas instead of crude oil, the whole hydrocarbon value chain can become significantly less ex- pensive, cleaner, and leaner.”

An advanced ceramic membrane converts methane (natural gas, CH 4 ) to aromatic chemicals and high-purity hydrogen. (Photo: CoorsTek Membrane Sciences)

The ceramic membranes are made from abundant materials like bari- um and zirconium found within large sand deposits, with the addition of thin electro-catalytic layers of plentiful metals like nickel and copper. For more information contact DaneBartlett at: dbartlett@coorstek.com or Raluca Doaga at rdoaga@keatingco.com

it is really very simple – inexpensive, abundant gas in and valuable liquid out through a clean, inexpensive process. At a nanochemistry level, however, where molecules interact with catalyst and membrane at a temperature around 700° C, there were many factors to en- gineer and control in order to render just the specific valuable molecules needed to make the new process work.”

Crystallisation frustration predicts metallic glass formation

you get a sort of frustration as the mate- rial tries to crystallise,” said Eric Perim, a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Materials Genomics at Duke. “The material can’t decide which crystalline structure it wants to converge to, and a metallic glass emerges. What we created is basically a measure of that confusion.” To determine the likelihood of an alloy forming a glass, the researchers broke its chemistry down into numerous sections, each containing only a handful of atoms. They then turned to a prototype database to simulate the hundreds of structures each section could potentially take. Called the AFLOW library, the database stores information on atomic structures that are commonly observed in nature. Us- ing these examples, the program computes what a novel combination of elements would look like with these structures. For example, the atomic structure of sodium chloride may be used to build a potential structure for copper zirconium.

Researchers at Duke University at Durham, North Carolina in the USA, have discovered a way to predict which alloys will form me- tallic glasses. The research could pave the way for new strong, conductive materials. Metallic glasses are sometimes formed when molten metal is cooled too fast for its atoms to arrange in a structured, crys- talline order. The result is a material with numerous desirable properties. Because they are metals, metallic glasses have high hardness and toughness and good thermal conductivity. Because their structure is disorganised, they are easy to process and shape and difficult to corrode. Thanks to these characteristics, metallic glasses are

used in a wide array of applications, includ- ing electrical applications, nuclear reactor engineering, medical industries, structural reinforcement and razor blades. In a new study, researchers from Duke University, in collaboration with groups fromHarvard University and Yale University, describe a method that can predict which binary alloys will form metallic glasses. Their technique involves computing and comparing the many pockets of different structures and energies that could be found within a solidified alloy. “When you get a lot of structures form- ing next to one another that are different but still have similar internal energies,

For more information contact : Ken Kingery at Ken.kingery@duke.edu Image credit: https://www.materialsgate.de/de/mnews/72846/Crystallization+frustration+predicts+metallic+glass+formation.html

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Chemical Technology • September 2016

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